Are we inside the era of disasters or are we merely inundated by mediated accounts of events categorized as catastrophic? America's Disaster Culture offers answers to this question and a critical theory surrounding the culture of "natural" disasters in American consumerism, literature, media, film, and popular culture.
In a hyper-mediated global culture, disaster events reach us with great speed and minute detail, and Americans begin forming, interpreting, and historicizing catastrophes simultaneously with fellow citizens and people worldwide. America's Disaster Culture is not policy, management, or relief oriented. It offers an analytical framework for the cultural production and representation of disasters, catastrophes, and apocalypses in American culture. It focuses on filling a need for critical analysis centered upon the omnipresence of real and imagined disasters, epidemics, and apocalypses in American culture. However, it also observes events, such as the Dust Bowl, Hurricane Katrina, and 9/11, that are re-framed and re-historicized as "natural" disasters by contemporary media and pop culture. Therefore, America's Disaster Culture theorizes the very parameters of classifying any event as a "natural" disaster, addresses the biases involved in a catastrophic event's public narrative, and analyzes American culture's consumption of a disastrous event. Looking toward the future, what are the hypothetical and actual threats to disaster culture? Or, are we oblivious that we are currently living in a post-apocalyptic landscape?

eBook - ePub
America's Disaster Culture
The Production of Natural Disasters in Literature and Pop Culture
- 176 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
America's Disaster Culture
The Production of Natural Disasters in Literature and Pop Culture
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INDEX
abject here, here, here, here, here–here
Fight Club here, here, here
Walking Dead, The here–here
abjection here–here, here, here, here, here, here
Fight Club here, here, here
Walking Dead, The here, here
absence here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here
earthquake here, here, here
accident here, here, here–here, here, here, here, here
Massumi, Brian here
Virilio, Paul here–here
Acts of God: the Unnatural History of Natural Disaster in America here
advertisements here, here, here, here, here
Aeolian process here
Africa here, here
African Americans here, here, here, here
agency here, here, here, here
agenda here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here
agrarian community here
agriculture here, here
Alabama here, here
Alaska here
alien here, here–here, here
Allende, Salvador here
Al-Qaeda here, here, here, here, here–here
ambiguity here, here, here
AMC here
America here, here, here, here, here, here, here
in the 1920s here
in the 1970s here
bin-Laden’s “Letter to America” here, here
disaster discourse here
and post-capitalism here–here
American body politic here, here
American business here
American capitalism here...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Halftitle Page
- Title Page
- Dedication Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Death of the Natural Disaster and the Birth of Disaster Culture
- Trouble When the Dust Settles: Narrative Authority and Ken Burns
- Discourse Disaster: San Francisco Earthquakes in 1906 and 1989
- Natural Disaster: September 11, 2001
- Gulf Wars: The Narratives of Iraq and New Orleans
- Sandy: Subjectivity, Celebrity, and Social Media
- The End of Disaster Capitalism: (A)bjection to (Z)ombies of Final Disasters
- Bibliography
- Index
- Imprint
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Yes, you can access America's Disaster Culture by Robert C. Bell,Robert M. Ficociello in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & North American Literary Criticism. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.